Scientists
are slowly finding that we travel in our dreams into parallel universes
or oceans of multiverses where different things are happening with us
 what and who we know and our environments.

In dreams
we migrate to the multiverse and go on an incredible journey.

As the world
turns, billions of people and perhaps also animals make these interdimensional
journeys. These journeys produce traces, be they electrical or of some
substance we cannot physically measure. All combined, the traces our journeys
make as we pass through billions of parallel universes create a form,
a collective shape, giving the multiverse existence.

The similarities
in brainwave patterns between waking life and sleep imply that on certain
levels the brain may be functioning in similar ways, the most notable
similarity being that we are conscious in both states.

In both states
we are receiving sensory input, though in the case of dreams, the origin
of this input and the organs involved in its reception remain cloaked.
We are compelled to dream so that we can be part of this other much greater
world which spans and in some way bonds all parallel universes.

Researchers
have shown that in early childhood  even in the womb  infants
have a very high proportion of REM sleep.

Perhaps our
consciousness originates from this other existence. That may explain why
consciousness is the most elusive and ethereal of forms. An understanding
of the chemical and electrical processes occurring in the brain does not
add up to an understanding of the nature of consciousness.

Dream research
will produce more data to hypothesize about, but it will never give us
an insight into the astounding multiverse of which our dreams form a part.